ÌÇÐÄvlog¹ÙÍø

ÌÇÐÄvlog¹ÙÍø Authors

See citation below for complete author information.

Abstract

In this paper, we implement a lab-in-field experiment among around 2000 children enrolled in 14 middle schools in Italy to investigate whether thinking about parental recommendation affects students’ choice of the field of study, inducing girls into humanistic fields and boys into scientific fields. First, we show that children perceive genderstereotypical recommendations from their parents: keeping constant ability, girls feel less supported in math and boys less supported in literature from their parents. Second, we show that thinking about mothers’ recommendations exacerbates the gender gap in the choice of the field of study: it decreases the probability that girls choose math compared to literature by 10 percentage points but does not influence the choice of boys. Thinking about fathers’ recommendations negatively influences the probability to choose math for girls and positively for boys, but the impact is not statistically significant at conventional level. Finally, consistent with the literature, we find that mothers have a stronger influence on their daughters’ schooling decisions and fathers have a stronger influence on their sons’ decisions with gender-stereotypical recommendations (Attanasio and Kaufmann, 2014). Our results highlight the crucial role of parents in shaping children’s choices and self-confidence in different fields: recommendations of parents induce equally able children to segregate into different fields, pushing more girls into humanities and more boys into sciences, thus exacerbating gender stereotypes in the choice of field.

Citation

Carlana, Michela, and Lucia Corno. "Thinking about Parents: Gender and Field of Study." AEA Papers and Proceedings 114 (May 2024).